The Puerta del Sol gained prominence in 1906, as it was the year of royal weddings: in January the
Infanta Maria Teresa married her first cousin
Ferdinand of Bavaria. The news of the engagement of
Alfonso XIII to
Princess Victoria Eugenia of Battenberg (granddaughter of
Queen Victoria of England), who in Spain would be known by her first two names: Victoria Eugenia, also reached Madrid. The Puerta del Sol became at the beginning of the century a vindictive icon of the political life of the country, due to its location halfway between the
Palacio de las Cortes de España (Palace of the Spanish Cortes) and the
Royal Palace of Madrid. A small store called
El Corte Inglés, located on Calle Preciados on the corner of Calle del Carmen and Calle de Rompelanzas, dedicated to tailoring and
dressmaking for children, began its activity. It had already been founded in 1890 and enjoyed a certain prestige. In the mid-twentieth century this store, converted into a department store, would undergo a commercial expansion along the northern area of the Puerta del Sol. At the end of the 19th century, one of the most important commercial centers was the Union Bazaar located in the Casa Cordero. In 1911 a Universal Eucharistic Congress was held and its celebrations took place in the Puerta del Sol. In 1913 the Palacio de Oñate, located on Calle Mayor, was demolished. The future monarch
Alfonso XIII, in his childhood, and his mother, the queen regent
Maria Christina, had an anecdote that would give rise to a popular children's story and tradition. When Alfonso was eight years old, a
baby tooth fell out and this event worried him a lot, so much so that his mother commissioned Father
Luis Coloma to write a story to reassure him. Coloma wrote a story about an imaginary mouse called
Ratoncito Pérez who lived in a big box of cookies in the warehouse of the Prats candy shop (located at number 8, Calle Arenal, very close to Puerta del Sol), and who collected the children's teeth under a
pillow. This little story, which later became so popular, reassured the child king Alfonso XIII. On November 12, 1912, Senator
José Canalejas, on his way to the Senate, was assassinated by three shots in front of the Librería San Martín by an anarchist. This bookstore was located in the southern area of Puerta del Sol, and today there is a plaque commemorating this event. In that same year, the writer
Ramón Gómez de la Serna established in one of the access streets to the Puerta del Sol a famous gathering in the Café Pombo: The "sacred crypt of Pombo". The writer
Ramón del Valle Inclán (a regular at the Cafés of the Puerta del Sol) wrote a play in 1928 entitled
Luces de Bohemia, in which part of the situations (starring Max Estrella) take place in the Puerta del Sol and its surroundings. In 1929 Francisco Elías directed the first
Spanish sound film,
El misterio de la Puerta del Sol, in which the hustle and bustle of the Puerta del Sol can be seen (and heard) . Due to its technical errors it was a failure from an economic point of view, so its importance is historical and documentary. Many of the revolutionary celebrations of the time are echoed in the Puerta del Sol. That same year the National Telephone Company of Spain was born and the first telegraph tower was installed in Casa Cordero. On September 13, 1923, martial law was proclaimed in Puerta del Sol and other places in Madrid, which initiated the dictatorship of
Miguel Primo de Rivera. From this period at the beginning of the 20th century, there are details in the literature about the popularity of the Corpus Christi procession in Madrid, which had its main route in the Puerta del Sol and in some of its main streets (Calle Carretas and Carrera de San Jerónimo). The procession was multitudinous and the great affluence of people gave business to the water carriers, who served water from the fountains with
aniseed aromas. Another religious procession that made its entrance in the Puerta is that of
Good Friday (called "del Santo Entierro"). These processions had their period of concealment during the Second Republic. From the same, in its condition of passage between
Cañadas Reales, every year in September the arrival of the cattle from the grazing areas was celebrated, claiming the rural past.
Second Republic and Civil War On April 14, 1931, the
proclamation of the Second Spanish Republic took place, and the Puerta del Sol witnessed the change of power and the popular celebrations for the proclamation of the
Republic; many Madrilenians came to the Plaza to celebrate and learn about the event. The crowd was so large that the members of the provisional government who were approaching by car to the
Casa de Correos (Gobernación) had to make the trip from Puerta de Alcalá to Puerta del Sol in two hours, and when they arrived at the main doors of Gobernación they were met by
civil guards who, hesitating, did not allow them to pass.
Maura shouted: "Gentlemen, give pass to the government of the Republic!" and, just at that moment, from one of the balconies waved the
Republican flag (waved by
Rafael Sánchez Guerra and Manuel Ossorio Florit). In 1934, when
Alejandro Lerroux went to the Casa de Correos to declare the
state of war, there was a shooting without consequences in the middle of Puerta del Sol. The Puerta del Sol would become the nerve center of celebrations and protests during the Republic, acquiring the image of a place of popular vindication. During the Republican period, the so-called
red sidewalk was established from Alcalá to Montera. This sidewalk was a meeting and strolling place for supporters of the Republic. During the beginnings of the
uprising of July 17–18, 1936, which turned into the
Civil War, Madrid fell under the
Republican faction, and soon (November 6, 1936) the
battle of Madrid began. Already in the initial advance to the capital from the south of Spain,
General Franco and
Mola ordered their forces to take the offensive against the capital; the evolution was so fast that they declared a few days later that "they will have coffee in the Puerta del Sol next week". The resistance in the area of the
University City prevented the assault on the capital. Later the
battle of Jarama paralyzed a broad front and definitely delayed the initial plans to invade the capital. Madrid maintained its resistance until 1939. During the first
aerial bombardments carried out in December, the Puerta del Sol suffered part of the destruction of its setts and some surrounding houses due to the explosion of several bombs (bombings of November 9 and 10). Of the subsequent air raids, one of the most serious for the Plaza was the one carried out on November 17, 1936, in which a bomb exploded on the corner with Calle de Alcalá, opening a
crater of twenty meters in diameter and fifteen meters deep; its momentum was such that it lifted the rails of the subway and brought them to the surface. The intense violence of the air attacks was diminishing in the first days of December, and later the artillery attacks from the
artillery batteries located in the
Casa de Campo (in its highest elevation, called Cerro Garabitas) were increasing. These artillery bombardments meant that the Puerta del Sol area was within artillery range and was frequently affected by the explosion of various 155 millimeter shells (the neighboring
Gran Vía was known during the war as "the Avenue of the fifteen and a half" due to the frequency of impacts of that caliber). The Puerta del Sol was not spared from these bombardments of the fifteen and a half, and was affected daily by the artillery of the rebel troops. The year 1936 ended with the bombardment of the Puerta del Sol, in which the artillerymen of Garabitas launched, during the chimes of midnight on New Year's Eve, twelve projectiles on the Puerta del Sol. During this post-war period, in the midst of
Franco's dictatorship, the southern building known as Corres is used as police headquarters and the General Directorate of State Security (Spanish: Dirección General de Seguridad del Estado, DGSE). The
basements were filled with
socialist and
communist prisoners who had been arrested by police officers. Some of these prisoners were held in the cellars for a period of seventy-two hours without charges being brought against them. Also after the Civil War, the department store
El Corte Inglés acquired a property at Calle Preciados #3: it was a multi-storey building dedicated to specific sales. Shopping centers increased their presence and some of them appeared in the streets near Puerta del Sol: Almacenes Arias (
Saldos Arias),
Galerías Preciados, Bazar de la Unión (from 1958 the premises became a self-service store called
Tobogán), etc. Different lottery sellers,
newspaper shops,
shoeshiners, etc. are scattered. In 1950, the municipal architect Herrero de Palacios directs a renovation of the Puerta del Sol to renew the street furniture of the square. The political regime established by Franco watched over the area and prevented it from being a meeting place; it is for this reason that Luis Moya in 1962 states that "the political function of the Puerta del Sol ended in 1936 (...) it is now a discreet central square, with a circulation suited to its size, with gardens and fountains, with stores and offices...". There is a dispute between literary and urbanistic, which begins with
Fernández de los Ríos stating that the Puerta del Sol has ceased to be the center of the Villa in favor of the Gran Vía. This dismantling operation directed by the municipal architect Manuel Herrero de Palacios facilitated the traffic through Puerta del Sol. In 1950, a horizontal plaque was placed on the ground in front of the main door of the
Edificio de Gobernación, representing the famous
Kilometer Zero, the origin of the six
radial roads leaving the Capital. It became a meeting place and meeting point. This geographical center was recalculated in 1978 and located again behind the
Prado Museum. From the same period dates the measure of 635.50 meters above mean sea level in Alicante, a measure that serves to trace the changes in the meter. In the sixties it became fashionable to place a large illuminated
Christmas tree in the center of the Plaza. In the renovation of the Purta (the mayor was Moreno Torres) in 1951 two twin fountains are placed, popularly known as
"El dos de oros" or
"Los ceniceros" ("The two of gold" or "The ashtrays"), both the work of Herrero de Palacios. In the sixties the daily flow of people along the Puerta del Sol leads Rafael García Serrano to mention that it "dumps like a pot" people towards the
Plaza de Oriente, from Calle de Carretas, Espoz y Mina, Alcalá, Calle del Carmen, del Correo and Montera: all provide people to the door. Calle Mayor and Carrera de San Jerónimo do not contribute to the net flow. In 1951
trolleybuses replaced electric streetcars at Puerta del Sol, although streetcars continued to run in Madrid until the 1960s. For the first time the
Cavalcade of Magi is established. Slowly, the hotels installed in the last century disappear, the premises are acquired to create shopping centers, boarding houses and offices, hardly any housing. The abundant advertisements that surrounded the balconies of the Puerta del Sol, which were so popular in the post-war period, are progressively eliminated. One of the advertisements was finally saved from this elimination, the luminous advertisement of "Tío Pepe" (named after
José Ángel de la Peña, a relative of the founder of
González Byass), due to an economic impediment: the high cost of its removal. This situation made this poster, which shows a bottle of sherry designed by Luis Pérez Solero (a bottle dressed in a jacket, a guitar and a hat), become a modern symbol of Puerta de Sol. The sign remained in place, and in the eighties it was decided to keep it (along with the Schweppes illuminated sign in the
Edificio Carrión), thanks to a popular vote that decided to keep them in place. The
retransmission of the twelve bells, which until then was only followed by radio, began on
Televisión Española in 1962. For many years, especially when there were only two public television channels, they were televised from the
Puerta del Sol in Madrid, except for those of 1973, which were broadcast from
Barcelona. The Puerta del Sol clock continues with the same annual ritual: 35 seconds before twelve o'clock, a ball at the top of the clock descends, sounding a chime. Then four double bells ring, representing the four quarters, and finally, at twelve o'clock, the twelve chimes begin, one every three seconds approximately. , placed in the square in 1967 In 1967 a statue of four meters high was placed in the square with the figure of
the Bear and the Strawberry Tree, a work by the sculptor Antonio Navarro Santafé. The statue placed in the entrance area of Calle de Alcalá represents the heraldic symbols of Madrid. This statue will be placed in various locations in the square throughout history. At that time the streets used to offer numerous
hot dog stands. In 1986, the facades of the buildings (in a total of fourteen buildings) of the Puerta del Sol are remodeled. The illumination installed by the City Council was designated by the people of Madrid as a
phallic forest. The twin fountains that were placed in the previous renovations in 1950 were moved to Paseo de García Lorca, in Vallecas, and were replaced by others, built by Ángel Rivière Gómez and Jaime Ortega Vidal. Mayor
Enrique Tierno Galván returns the statue of the Mariblanca to Puerta del Sol and places it in the middle of a superficial bus stop. It is decided to close successively some streets to the traffic: one of the first is Calle Preciados, then Calle del Carmen and finally Calle Montera. The Puerta becomes a collection point for the
blood bank that is periodically set up in the area. == 21st century ==